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Nuclear Imports (Chronological)


Year/Date Exporter Item(s) Remarks
1960s Russia/Soviet Union Hot cells; medical radio-isotope production laboratory Hot cells capable of manipulating spent fuel
1962 Russia/Soviet Union 2MW IRT-5000 research reactor  
1970 to 1990 Chinese Government (China) Low-enriched uranium (LEU); weapons-grade uranium; ring magnets (assistance in building samarium-cobalt magnets); UO2  
1975 to 1978 SNIA Visacosa (Italy) Plutonium extraction equipment (lead-shielded hot cells, glove-boxes, Pyrex micro mixer-settlers with Tygon or Teflon tubes)  
Late 1970s SGN (Societe Generale pour les Techniques Nouvelles) (France) Auxiliary facilities (effluent treatment station and hot cell laboratory) Facilities for extracting plutonium from spent reactor fuel
Late 1970s to 1981 Aeronautics Ministry Institute of Space Activities (Brazil) UO2 supplier Shipment allegedly halted in response to publicity
Late 1970s to 1982 ONAREM (Office National des Resources Minieres) (Niger) UO2  
Late 1970s to 1982 National Laboratory of Industrial Engineering (LNETI) (Portugal) Yellowcake Supplied without safeguards
1976 through early 1980s National Committee for Nuclear Energy (CNEN) (Italy) 2.6% enriched uranium; technical assistance; negotiated 10-year agreement to assist in atomic energy, including reactor physics  
1976 to 1981 CERBAG (France) Highly enriched uranium (HEU) reactor fuel; built Osiraq reactor  
1976 to 1989 Banca Nazionale del Lavoro (BNL) (Italy) Four commercial contracts with shipments of major equipment; $3 billion to $5 billion of unauthorized loans to Iraq, including at least $920 million of export credit guarantees and over 2,500 letters of credit Indicted by US federal authorities, February 1991
1977 SNIA Techint (formerly SNIA Visacosa) with Ansaldo Mechanico Nucleare (Italy) Delivered four labs (fuel fabrication lab, chemical engineering lab, radioisotope lab, and materials-testing lab); hot cell complex for dissolving fuel rods  
1979 through 1980s CNEN – (Brazil) Nuclear materials and equipment for laboratory tests; assistance in Osirak nuclear reactor  
1980s Natron Consulting and Designing Company (Brazil) Designed plant for UO2 production  
1980 Hasenclever (MAN subsidiary) (Germany) Melting press for iron pieces  
1980s Kavo (Germany) Investigated for supplying electrical components for nuclear weapons factory  
1980s Lurgi (subsidiary of Metallge-
sellschaft) (Germany)
Contracted to provide technical assistance in construction and processing of industrial pipelines Contract for training cancelled by German government
1980s TBT Deep Well Drilling Technology (half-owned by Gildemeister) (Germany) Investigated for supplying technical equipment to Taji  
1980s Zertz und Scheid Ingenieurge-
sellschaft (ZSI) (Germany)
Technical assistance (construction and processing of industrial pipelines) Contract for training cancelled by German government
1980 Brown Boveri (Switzerland) Design of calutron magnet  
1980s Buehrle-
Oerlikon (see also Oerlikon) (Switzerland)
Vacuum furnaces, components, and training Parent company of three subsidiaries (Balzers [Zurich], Balzers [Liechtenstein], and Arthur Pfeiffer [FRG])
1980s Presray Corp. (United States) Rubber door seals to prevent spread of contaminants For State Electrical Industries
1980 EMO Electrical Engineering Corp./Ohrid (Yugoslavia) Equipped Tarmiya calutron complex  
1980s and 1997 Federal Directorate of Supply and Procurement (Yugoslavia) Involvement with Al Tahidi State Establisment Project 946; Built Tarmiya calutron complex  
1981 Sebatra (Belgium) Large fertilizer factory at Al Qaim for uranium concentrate production Plant possibly used for chemical weapons agents
1981 Brazilian Air Force's Aerospace Technology Center (CTA) (Brazil) Enriched uranium to 70% U-235  
1981 Commissariat a l'Energie Atomique (CEA) (France) Heavy water and Osiraq reactor  
1981 to 1990 Chemadex (Poland) Serviced part of Iraq's large fertilizer factory at Al Qaim Factory produced uranium concentrate and possibly chemical warfare agents
1982 to 1987 T.P.S. (Germany) Pre-machined soft iron pieces Material used to fabricate magnets used in EMIS enrichment program
1983 Nuclebras Mineral Resources Department (Brazil) Prospected to find uranium in Iraq Prospected for 15 days
1983 ENEA (Italy) Site training for Tuwaitha nuclear fuel production laboratory  
1984 Mineral Technology Center (CETEM) (Brazil) Analyzed uranium ore from Abu Shakir mine  
1984 to 1989 and unknown Leybold (subsidiary of Degussa) (Germany) Electron beam welders, technical assistance, and ancillary equipment (rough vacuum pumps); dual-use furnace equipment  
1985 Minerart (created by former Nuclebras employees) (Brazil) Evaluated Abu Shakir uranium reserve for Iraqi Geological Survey  
1985 Kloeckner (Germany) Contractor to Nassr State Establishment  
1985 to 1988 Finnigan-MAT (Germany and United States) Mass spectrometers Used to sample uranium during enrichment to nuclear weapon grade
1985 to 1989 Tektronix (United States) Electronic measuring equipment via German firm Gildemeister; digital oscilloscope to Germany via MBB to Saad-16 Sold to SOTI, a subdivision of the Ministry of Defense
Between 1985 and 1990 BDM Corporation (United States) CAD equipment  
1985 to 1990 Carl Zeiss (United States) Licensed to sell microcomputers  
1985 to 1990 Data General Corporations (United States) Licensed to sell computers  
1985 to 1990 Honeywell Inc. (United States) Licensed to sell computers  
Between 1985 and 1990 International Computer Ltd. (United States) Licensed to sell computer equipment  
Between 1985 and 1990 International Computer Systems (United States) Electronics and computer equipment  
Between 1985 and 1990 Sackman Associates (United States) Licensed to sell computer equipment  
1986 Bundesamt fuer Wirtshaft (BAW) (Germany) Nickel powder for fabrication of diffusion barriers used in gaseous diffusion  
1986 Canberra Elektronik GmbH and Canberra Industries Inc. (United States) Licensed to sell electronic and computing equipment able to measure neutrons  
1986 Veeco Instruments Inc. (United States) Computers for SOTI  
1986 to 1987 Hewlett Packard (United States) Licensed to sell electronic testing and computer graphics equipment to the Iraqi Atomic Energy Commission; Computers for operating machine tools  
1986 to 1989 Perkin Elmer Corp. (United States) Licensed to sell electronic and photographic equipment for chemical research; licensed to sell computers to use with chromatograph; Plasma spray system  
1987 Vereinigte Aluminwerke (Germany) Aluminum tubing for use in centrifuge fabrication  
1987 TMG Engineering (United Kingdom) Front company for Al-Arabi holding company of Baghdad Key front company in UK-based Iraqi procurement network
1987 Axel Electronics Inc. (United States) Licensed to sell capacitors Capacitors can power the firing set for nuclear weapon
1987 Cerberus Ltd. (United States) Licensed to sell over computers to Al Qa Qaa State Establishment  
1987 Spectra Physics (United States) Licensed to sell lasers and laser systems for study of laser physics and applications  
1987 to 1988 River Don Castings Ltd. (United Kingdom) 60-ton rough-machined discs used for magnet discs Used in calutrons to enrich uranium to nuclear weapon grade
1987 to 1989 and unknown H & H Metalform – Nuclear (Germany) Flow-forming machines capable of making centrifuge rotors; middleman to transfer CNC machines  
1987 and Late 1980s Technology Development Group (TDG) (United Kingdom) Invested in Swiss firm Schmiede-
meccanica and German firm H & H Metalform
Key front company in UK-based Iraqi procurement network
1987 to 1990 Matrix Churchill Ltd. (Formerly known as TI Machine Tools) (United Kingdom) Sensitive computer-controlled machine tools; high-tech lathes; centrifuge components; on-site training for Iraqi technicians; turning machines; machine tools; magnets, vacuum chambers, ion sources, and collector components for calutrons to enrich uranium  
1987 to 1990 MEED International (United Kingdom) Machine tools and equipment A key front company in the UK-based Iraqi procurement network
1988 Gerber (Germany) Turning machines  
1988 Gerber Systems Technology (United States) Licensed to sell computers and run computer-controlled milling and turning machine tools For Ministry of Industry and Military Industrialization (MIMI)
1988 TI Coating Inc. (United States) Chemical vapor deposition blueprint; training and manuals for accompanying TI Coating equipment Sold to Badr Establishment of Mechanical Engineering
1988 Universal Voltronics Corporation (United States) High-voltage power supplies to General Directorate for Industrial Supply (GDIS) Power supplies were reversed engineered and used in EMIS program; GDIS stated that equipment was for RF generators and heating equipment
1988 to 1989 Leybold Vacuum Systems (LVS) (United States) Electron beam welder with application specific mandrel, expanding mandrel and rollers, and numerical controller to assemble centrifuges for enriching uranium; five-axis CNC machine US subsidiary of German company
1988 to 1989 Buderus (Feldmuehle subsidiary) (Germany) Technical assistance in building Taji  
1988 to 1989 Dango and Dienenthal engineering works (Germany) Special equipment for Taji  
1988 to 1989 Hochtief (Germany) Taji construction assistance  
1988 to 1989 MAN AG former employees (Walter Busse and Bruno Stemmler) (Germany) Construction and design information for centrifuges; information on patented process for oxidizing maraging steel rotors to prevent corrosion  
1988 to 1989 600 Services, Ltd. (United Kingdom) Eroda NC 650 machine tool; Bridgeport Vertical Machining Center BPC 520V machine; Bridgeport Interact 11 Mk 4 machine; Bridgeport Interact 1 Mk 2 machine CNC machines configured for the centrifuge manufacturing program
1988 to 1990 Ferrostaal, SMS Hansclever, and other MAN subsidiaries (Germany) Contractor and supplier of universal smelting plant for Taji  
1988 to 1990 International Computer Systems (United Kingdom) Licensed to sell computers to Ministry of Industry and Military Industrialization (MIMI) and Al Atheer, the Ministry of Defense, Hatteen General Establishment, Badr Establishment of Mechanical Engineering, State Establishment for Heavy Engineering Equipment (SEHEE)  
1988 to 1990 Matrix Churchill Corp. and XYZ Options (United States) Plant to produce high-precision tungsten carbide tools Built at Al Atheer
1989 Boehler Edelstahl (Austria) Maraging steel used in preforms of centrifuge rotors  
1989 Aviatest (subsidiary of Rheinmetall) (Germany) Machining equipment for military research complex, Saad-16  
1989 Inwako – Nuclear (Germany) UK-made ring magnets (aluminum nickel cobalt magnets and samarium cobalt magnets)  
1989 Messer-
schmitt-
Boelkow-
Blohm (MBB) (Germany)
Machining equipment for Iraq military research complex, Saad-16  
1989 Rheinmetall (Germany) Machining equipment for Iraqi military research complex, Saad-16  
1989 Transtechnica (subsidiary of MBB) (Germany) Machining equipment to Saad-16 Possible use in nuclear program
1989 Hamamatsu Photonics KK (Japan) Streak video cameras and support equipment Stated use of equipment for auto engine research
1989 Acomel (Switzerland) 28 KVA high-frequency drive converters; frequency converters Each unit capable of powering a large number of centrifuges in a cascade to enrich uranium
1989 Cetec (Switzerland) UF6 resistant valves for enrichment program Equipment seized in Jordan
1989 Atlas Equipment (United Kingdom) Attempted to smuggle US-made electrical capacitors Used to trigger nuclear weapons
1989 Endshire Export Marketing (United Kingdom) Samarium cobalt magnets For use in centrifuges to enrich uranium
1989 River Don Castings Ltd. (United Kingdom) Patterns for castings manufacture to Taji  
1989 CVC Products Inc. (United States) Attempted to sell large-throat vacuum diffusion pumps US Customs seized equipment prior to transfer
1989 Dupont (United States) Nuclear-grade fluorinated Krytox vacuum pump oil for centrifuge program  
1989 E Z Logic Data Systems, Inc. (United States) Licensed to sell computers Sold to Hatteen General Establishment
1989 Hipotronics (United States) Power supply units (four 45-kv, 5-amp and five 21-kv, 1.1-amp), with reverse polarity  
1989 Siemens Corp. (United States) Computers for testing and control of two X-ray diffraction systems capable of high temperature analysis of mineral powders, and stress and texture analysis of minerals US subsidiary of Siemens; sold to Ministry of Industry and Military Industrialization (MIMI) and Al Atheer
August to September 1989 US Departments of Defense and State, and Department of Energy nuclear weapon labs Lawrence Livermore, Los Alamos, and Sandia (United States) Nuclear weapon detonation technology and flyer plate technology, used to control force and shape of implosive shock waves  
1989 to 1990 China Wanbao Engineering Company (CWEC) (China) Lithium hydride  
1989 to 1990 Interatom GmbH (Siemens subsidiary) (Germany) Contracted to build plant to produce steel and aluminium pipes, technical assistance, training and machinery (helium leak detectors and vacuum pumps); contracted to supply clean room Clean room contract blocked by German Customs two days before Iraq invaded Kuwait
1989 to 1990 RoSch Verbund-
werkstoff GmbH (directed by former MAN Technologie employee) (Germany)
Carbon-fiber rotors  
1989 to 1990 Strabag – Nuclear (Germany) Planning work for Al Furat pilot hall for 100-unit centrifuge cascade  
1989 to 1990 Consarc (United States) Vacuum and annealing furnaces; licensed to sell high-temperature "skull" furnaces and numerical control equipment for use in making crucibles for high-performance furnace system and furnaces Sold to Ministry of Industry and Military Industrialization (MIMI)
1989 to 1990, 1998 and unknown Siemens – Nuclear (Germany) Contractor of computers for numerically controlled machine tools for centrifuge end cap production; extra high-precision electronic switches; computer-control system for electron beam welder; x-ray diffraction systems; numerical control units paired with milling, boring, turning, spin-forming and flow-forming machine tools; high-voltage DC switches Contract blocked by UN embargo
1989 to 1990 XYZ Options, Inc. (United States) Powder press for compaction of nuclear fuels at Al Atheer; owner of CarbiTech of Topeka, KS, which trained Iraqis to manufacture carbide-tipped inserts for machine tools  
1989 to March 1990 Schaublin (Switzerland) High-precision turning machines; small components and forgings for the centrifuge prototype; milling machines Machine tools were programmed by unknown third parties to manufacture centrifuge parts; can be used to produce centrifuges to enrich uranium
1989 to 1991 Schmiede-
meccanica (SMB) (Switzerland)
End caps and baffles for centrifuges to enrich uranium; manufactured and attempted to ship specialty steel forgings for Iraq's first 100-centrifuge cascade For Urenco G-1 centrifuge
January to May 1990 Rhein-Bayern Fahrzeugbau GmbH & Co KG – Nuclear (Germany) Ferrite spacer magnets and soft iron ring band cores; Die-casting equipment to manufacture stator coil rings  
1990 China North Industries Corporation (NORINCO) (China) Lithium hydride used as a thermonuclear fuel constituent PRC denied report
Unknown to 1990 Arthur Pfeiffer Vakuum-
technik GmbH (Germany)
Induction, resistance, vacuum furnaces  
1990 Export Union GmbH (Germany) Investigated for supplying metal to manufacture gas centrifuges for uranium enrichment; contracted to sell maraging steel Sale blocked by UN embargo; only a test sample delivered
1990 Unknown Nuclear Suppliers (Germany) Nickel powder for uranium diffusion barriers; materials and components to produce centrifuges (aluminum alloy tube extrusions for producing molecular pumps)  
1990 Nukem (Germany) Technology and materials for centrifuge fabrication  
1990 Saarstahl AG (Germany) Investigated for manufacturing specialty metal for manufacturing centrifuges for uranium enrichment Only a test sample delivered
1990 Balzers Liechtenstein (subsidiary of Swiss firm Buehrle-
Oerlikon) (Liechten-
stein)
High temperature heat-treatment furnaces; smelting and casting installations; personnel training Managed all contracts between German and Swiss Oerlikon subsidiaries, and the Iraqi Ministry of Industry and Military Industrialization (MIMI)
1990 Balzers Hochvakuum AG (subsidiary of Swiss firm Buehrle-
Oerlikon) (Switzerland)
Leak indicators, vacuum pumps, tungsten wire Components for use with two vacuum furnaces associated with nuclear program
1990 Euromac Ltd. (United Kingdom) 40 US-made electrical capacitors, used to trigger nuclear weapons Nuclear program
1991 Vertiebs Ltd. (Germany) Flow-forming machine  
1991 Nupro (United States) Bellow valves  
1992 Balzers Hochvakuum GmbH (Germany) Electron beam welder  
1992 Awmel SA (Switzerland) Drive converter Capable of driving cascaded centrifuge arrangement
1993 Calorstat (France) Bellows for centrifuges  
1993 ImphyTecphy (France) Maraging steel  
1993 Robatel (France) Pulsed columns for plutonium extraction  
1993 Technicatome (France) Equipment for nuclear reactors  
1993 Nuovo Pignone (Italy) Gas-diffusing compressor  
1993 Alwo (Switzerland) Equipment Possible supplier
1993 Lasag (Switzerland) Bottom bearings for centrifuges Possible supplier
April 1994 Savaco Plinke (Germany) Offered to supply H2SO4 (96%), low concentration 40-60% sulfuric acid At the time UNSCOM found documents at Al Qa Qaa State Establishment, no decision had yet been made to proceed.
1994 Bridgeport (United Kingdom) Maker of equipment found in nuclear facilities Firm claims equipment was exported legally and diverted later by Iraq
1994 Colchester Lathes (United Kingdom) Maker of equipment found in nuclear facilities by UN inspectors Firm claims equipment was exported legally and diverted later by Iraq
1994 FMT (United Kingdom) Maker of equipment found in nuclear facilities by UN inspectors Firm claims equipment was exported legally and diverted later by Iraq
1994 Hadland Photonics (United Kingdom) Maker of equipment found in nuclear facilities by UN inspectors Firm claims equipment was exported legally and diverted later by Iraq
1994 Harrison (United Kingdom) Maker of equipment found in nuclear facilities by UN inspectors Firm claims equipment was exported legally and diverted later by Iraq
1994 Instron (United Kingdom) Maker of equipment found in nuclear facilities by UN inspectors Firm claims equipment was exported legally and diverted later by Iraq
1994 Lumonics (United Kingdom) Maker of equipment found in nuclear facilities by UN inspectors Firm claims equipment was exported legally and diverted later by Iraq
1994 Millitorr (United Kingdom) Maker of electrical equipment diverted to EMIS uranium enrichment program Firm claims equipment was exported legally and diverted later by Iraq
1994 Morgan Rushworth (United Kingdom) Maker of equipment found in nuclear facilities by UN inspectors Firm claims equipment was exported legally and diverted later by Iraq
1994 Renishaw-
Probe (United Kingdom)
Maker of equipment found in nuclear facilities by UN inspectors Firm claims equipment was exported legally and diverted later by Iraq
1994 Wickman Bennett (United Kingdom) Machine tools Firm claims equipment was exported legally and diverted later by Iraq
1995 Firas Trading Company (Jordan) High-end machine tools; production lines for making diamond cutting tools and powder metallurgy; highly sensitive plasma spray machine Broker for contract between Iraq's Badr State Establishment and Belstroyimpex (Belarus)
Unknown Voest-Alpine AG (a state-owned firm) (Austria) Magnets for calutrons  
Unknown Danfyisik (Denmark) High-voltage power supplies Power supplies were used to power R120 separators as part of Iraq's EMIS program
Unknown Sciaky (France) Electron beam welders  
Unknown Thomson CSF – Nuclear (France) High-voltage DC switches (thyrister oblique switches) Adopted the name Thales Group in December 2000
Unknown Arburg (Germany) Jet molding machines with application-specific fixtures  
Unknown C. Plath – Nuclear (Germany) Components for centrifuge program  
Unknown Degussa (Germany) Furnaces, magnets, vacuum chambers; established Al Furat centrifuge factory  
Unknown Dorries Scharmann GmbH (now subsidiary of Bremer Vulkan AG) (Germany) Large turning machines  
Unknown Dr. Reutlinger & Sohne KG (Germany) Horizontal and vertical balancing machines  
Unknown Finnigan-MAT - (Germany and United States) Mass spectrometers (MAT 26 machines) to work with gasses (probably UF6) and solids  
Unknown Gildemeister – Nuclear (Germany) Turning machines  
Unknown Heinzinger (Germany) Sold high-voltage power supplies to Iraq's General Directorate for Industrial Supply (GDIS) Power supplies used to power R120 separators as part of EMIS program
Unknown Kieserling und Albrecht GmbH (Germany) Flow-forming machine  
Unknown Leifeld – Nuclear (Germany) Horizontal flow turning machines  
Unknown Leitz (Germany) Three-axis coordinate measurement machine  
Unknown Maho AG (Germany and US) Milling machines  
Unknown Mauserwerke Oberndorf GmbH - Missile and possibly nuclear (Germany) High-precision coordinate measuring machine at Al Kindi (part of Saad-16 missile complex)  
Unknown Messer Gressheim GmbH (subsidiary of Hoechst chemical group) (Germany) Electron beam welder  
Unknown Metallextrak-
tion AB (Germany)
Mixer-settler units capable of processing uranium and plutonium  
Unknown

Neue Magdeburger Wekzeug-
maschinfabrik (Germany)

Turning machines with specific fixtures  
Unknown REFU Elektronik GmbH (Germany) 15KVA high-frequency converters  
Unknown Schiess (subsidiary of Metallgesell-
schaft) (Germany)
Milling, boring, and turning machines  
Unknown Schloemann-
Siemag (Germany)
Assistance in construction of Taji  
Unknown SHW (Schwabische Huttenwerke GmbH) (Germany) Milling machines; license holder to build sensitive machine tools  
Unknown Wotan (now subsidiary of US firm Pratt & Whitney and German firm Schiess AG) (Germany) Milling machine  
Unknown Zeiss (Germany) High-precision coordinate measuring machine  
Unknown DEA (Digital Electronic Automation) (Italy) Coordinate measurement machines  
Unknown Innocenti (Italy) Five-axis gantry mill  
Unknown OCEM (Italy) High-voltage power supplies to Iraq's General Directorate for Industrial Supply (GDIS) Power supplies used to power R120 separators as part of EMIS program
Unknown Unknown Nuclear Suppliers (Poland) Possible supplier of high explosives and furnished bomb parts  
Unknown Asea Brown Boveri (ABB) – Nuclear (Sweden) Large hot and cold isostatic presses; associated furnaces Capable of pressing high explosives into shapes needed for implosion devices; both presses destroyed by UN inspectors
Unknown ABRA (Switzerland) Hot and cold isostatic presses  
Unknown Aciera (Switzerland) Three-axis milling machines  
Unknown Agie (Switzerland) 11 electrical discharge machines For working exotic metals
Unknown Balzers (Switzerland) Electrically controlled bellows valves Capable of being used in the centrifuge program for uranium enrichment
Unknown Charmilles (Switzerland) Ram-type electrical discharge machines For working exotic metals
Unknown Dixi (Switzerland) Jig bores One was capable of being used to develop nuclear weapons
Unknown EWAG (Switzerland) Five-axis tool grinding machines Designed to operate with computers for precision grinding
Unknown Hauser (Switzerland) Jig bores and jig grinders  
Unknown Leitz (Switzerland) Three-axis coordinate measurement machine Can be used to develop centrifuge parts for uranium enrichment
Unknown Oerlikon (Switzerland) Three-axis milling machines  
Unknown Plasmatechnik (subsidiary of Sulzer Bros.) (Switzerland) Plasma spray systems Can be used to develop nuclear weapons
Unknown SIP (Switzerland) Jig bores Four were capable of making precision components for the Iraqi nuclear weapon program
Unknown Vakuum Apparate Technik (VAT) (Switzerland) Uranium hexafluoride-
resistant pneumatic valves
Can be used in the Iraqi centrifuge program for uranium enrichment
Unknown Amersham (United Kingdom) 33 ampoules of plutonium-238 and six ampoules of plutonium-239  
Unknown ELMA (United States) High-voltage power supplies to General Directorate for Industrial Supply (GDIS) Used to power R120 separators for EMIS program
Unknown Hardinge Brothers Inc. (United States) "Super Precision" turning lathe; capable of being used to produce centrifuges Found by UN inspectors at Al Atheer
Unknown Maho AG - US and Germany (United States) Milling machines  
Unknown SIP Corporation (United States) Jig bores  

Key Sources: Arms Control Today; Bulletin of Atomic Scientists; Defense And Foreign Affairs Weekly; Fact Sheet: Iraq's Nuclear Weapon Programme, IAEA Action Team; Diario de Noticias; Daily Telegraph (London); Fourth Consolidated Report of the Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency under paragraph 16 of Security Council resolution 1051 (1996); Frankfurter Rundschau (Frankfurt/Main); Institute for Science and International Security; The Iran Brief; Khidhir Hamza and Jeff Stein, Saddam's Bombmaker: The Terrifying Inside Story of the Iraqi Nuclear and Biological Weapons Agenda; New York Times; Los Angles Times; Mednews; Nuclear Developments; Nuclear Threat Initiative Database; Nucleonics Week; Proliferation Issues; Steve Weissman and Herbert Krosney, The Islamic Bomb: The Nuclear Threat to Israel and the Middle East; San Jose Mercury News; Sunday Telegraph (London); Time; Wall Street Journal; Washington Post; Wisconsin Project on Nuclear Arms Control; Federation of American Scientists.



 

Updated November 2003


Import Table by Date
 
 


Iraq Maps
The Biological Weapons Convention (BWC)
Addressing the Spread of Cruise Missiles and Unmanned Air Vehicles (UAVs)
To Comply or Not to Comply: Outline of the UN Inspections Mechanism in Iraq
WMD in the Middle East
Dusty Agents and the Iraqi Chemical Weapons Arsenal
U.S. and Hostile Powers: Iraq
Limiting the Use of WMD between Regional Powers: Iran vs. Iraq—Options
Treaties and Organizations
Senate Intel Panel Releases Two Iraq Reports (2006)
In Focus: IAEA and Iraq (2005)
UNMOVIC 21st Quarterly Report (2005),
Comprehensive Report of the Special Advisor to the DCI on Iraq’s WMD (2004)
Saddam's Iraq and Weapons of Mass Destruction: Iraq as a Case Study of a Middle Eastern Proliferant (2004)
Duelfer Report (BW & CW sections) [70 Mb] (2004)
18th quarterly report of UNMOVIC to the UN Sec General from 27 Aug 2004
17th quarterly report of UNMOVIC to the UN Sec General from 28 May 2004
Redirection of WMD Scientists in Iraq and Libya (2004)
16th quarterly report of UNMOVIC to the UN Sec General from 27 Feb 2004
WMD in Iraq: Evidence and Implications (2004)
The War in Iraq: An Intelligence Failure? (2003)
Disarming Iraq by Force: WMD Stakes and Scenarios (2003)
Iraq: Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD) Capable Missiles and Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) (2003)
International Atomic Energy Agency: Iraq Action Team (2003)
Unresolved Disarmament Issues: Iraq's Proscribed Weapons Programmes (2003)
Iraq's Weapons of Mass Destruction: A Net Assessment (2002)
Federation of American Scientists: Iraq Missile Guide (2000)
The Future of Chemical and Biological Disarmament in Iraq: From UNSCOM to UNMOVIC (1999)
UNSCOM's Comprehensive Review
Strengthening the BWC: Lessons from the UNSCOM Experience (1997)
Monitoring and Verification in a Noncooperative Environment: Lessons from the UN Experience in Iraq (1996)
Bill of Indictment: German Court Case Involving Iraq's Weapon Procurement (1993)
Iraq's Chemical and Biological Capability in the Kuwait Theater of Operations (1990)



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